Sometimes I think that all it would take for worldwide conversion to Christianity is a true and widespread telling of the history of the Bible -- complete with accounts of its supernatural preservation, and of the men and women who, over the centuries, were martyred for their efforts to put it in our hands. (Pictured above: William Tyndale, strangled and burned at the stake for translating the Bible into English; his last words were reportedly "Lord, open the eyes of the King of England" -- a prayer that was answered, just 75 years later, with the publication of the King James Bible.)

I'm happy to report that this true and widespread telling is freely and irresistibly available to anyone with the heart to hear it. The vehicle: the riveting documentary The Indestructible Book. Narrated by the late Dr. Ken Connolly, author of ﻿﻿a five-star companion book by the same t﻿itle﻿, this video makes a persuasive case for the Bible's divine origins based simply on its phenomenal history.